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Well, obviously a marching band will use a marching snare drum. Drill lines, that specialize in drums also use the marching snare drum. Any type of band that is going to be on the move will probably be using marching snare drums.
As many as you want.
Two stores that sell sets of snare drums suitable for a marching band are Amazon and Best Buy. A dedicated agent will be happy to help you find more information on their official website.
The kind of marching band drums that are actually on the field marching are basses, snares and tenors. The kinds of drums that are technially part of the marching band but do not actually march would be timpini, tom-toms. Or at least this is how it is for my high school band. Hope this helped!
There are three types of drums that are common in marching band: the Snare drum, the Bass drum, and the Quad-Toms. Cymbals are also common in marching band, even though they are not a drum. If your school has a drumline, chances are there will be cymbals in it because they are commonly thought of as percussion instruments.
Well, obviously a marching band will use a marching snare drum. Drill lines, that specialize in drums also use the marching snare drum. Any type of band that is going to be on the move will probably be using marching snare drums.
As many as you want.
Quads and Marching snare
Two stores that sell sets of snare drums suitable for a marching band are Amazon and Best Buy. A dedicated agent will be happy to help you find more information on their official website.
The kind of marching band drums that are actually on the field marching are basses, snares and tenors. The kinds of drums that are technially part of the marching band but do not actually march would be timpini, tom-toms. Or at least this is how it is for my high school band. Hope this helped!
There are three types of drums that are common in marching band: the Snare drum, the Bass drum, and the Quad-Toms. Cymbals are also common in marching band, even though they are not a drum. If your school has a drumline, chances are there will be cymbals in it because they are commonly thought of as percussion instruments.
well the type of stikcks i use for marching band are ralph hardimon signiture sticks because the weight of them are fantastic to me and that is what the rest of the snareline use.
It depends. If you are in an orchestra, it would be the Timpani. If you are in a Marching Band, I would say either Snare or Bass drum. It all depends on what kind of band you are playing in.
Generally you can call it a percussion ensemble. But, if it is a line like a bass drumline, or a snare line of marching individuals, you can call it a drumline.
The first marching band to ever march during halftime at a football game was the University of Illinois' Marching Illini. They performed at halftime in 1907 during the University of Illinois' game against the University of Chicago.
The short answer is a snare drum. But snare drums really do need to be tuned - they just aren't tuned to a specific note like a xylophone or timpani (unless you are a hard-core tuner, then you could). Snare drums are on every drumset, in every marching band, and found in most concert band repertoire.
Lois Wirth was a snare drum marching band player in Nebraska. She played a very rare instrument. See the link for further information.